Schools

Waukesha Residents Earns National Teaching Certification

Three Waukesha residents earned certification through the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards, which is one of the highest credential available for educators.

Waukesha residents recently earned arguably the highest national teaching credential available.

The three residents earned certifications through the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards. Just 100,000 teachers around the nation have earned this level of certification. A total of 79 teachers from Wisconsin earned that honor this year.

  • Joseph Dellis, of Waukesha, earned certification for career and technical education/early adolescence through young adulthood. Dellis works for Kettle Moraine High School.
  • Sara Brown, of Waukesha, earned certification for mathematics/adolescence and young adulthood. Brown works for Brown Deer High School.
  • Christy Timms, of Waukesha, earned certification for exceptional needs specialist/early childhood through young adulthood. Timms works for Greenfield High School.

The teachers earned their certifications after a series of assessments including four portfolio entries that feature teaching practice and six constructed response exercises that assess content knowledge. The entire certification process takes between one and three years to complete.

Find out what's happening in Waukeshawith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Wisconsin is among approximately two-thirds of states that provide salary incentives and cover some costs to achieve the advanced credential. State teachers can receive up to $2,000 to reimburse the cost of earning national board certification and nine annual stipends of $2,500 if they remain employed as educators.

“Research shows that when educators go through the required steps to earn national board certification, there is a positive impact on student achievement,” said State Superintendent Tony Evers. “Educator effectiveness is critical to helping our students succeed, and national board certification is one means to ensure the quality of the teacher in the classroom.”

Find out what's happening in Waukeshawith free, real-time updates from Patch.


Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here